โOct-29-2013 08:49 PM
โNov-19-2013 12:40 PM
westend wrote:
Good start! That's definitely going to be an improvement. Do you know about these 3M pinstripe removal wheel?
โNov-19-2013 05:11 AM
โNov-18-2013 05:18 PM
โNov-18-2013 04:44 PM
โNov-04-2013 10:02 PM
โNov-04-2013 09:00 PM
westend wrote:mfdengineer wrote:Primer and body coats were applied with a Graco airless sprayer, using a fine tip. The accent colors were applied with rattle cans.
Thanks for the tip. I did not even think about using a chalk line. When you painted yours, how did you apply the paint? Spray paint, roller/brush, or air compressor?
Also, do I need to apply primer first? It is all aluminum exterior but it is already painted.
The essence of having a good bond between old finishes and application of paint is prep. If you are painting older, painted aluminum, you want to remove the dirt and oxidation in the surface. I use a prepaint liquid conditioner like Jasco and plastic scuff pads. You don't necessarily have to prime but I find that a good primer allows for good bond strength and the final coats lay down flatter with no fisheye or other inclusions. On the Starcraft, I used Sherwin-Williams DTM Industrial primer and primed the entire body. I was painting multiple different surfaces, some of them bare aluminum.
The painting was captured here.
โOct-31-2013 04:36 PM
mfdengineer wrote:Primer and body coats were applied with a Graco airless sprayer, using a fine tip. The accent colors were applied with rattle cans.
Thanks for the tip. I did not even think about using a chalk line. When you painted yours, how did you apply the paint? Spray paint, roller/brush, or air compressor?
Also, do I need to apply primer first? It is all aluminum exterior but it is already painted.
โOct-31-2013 09:11 AM
โOct-31-2013 08:36 AM
โOct-31-2013 07:43 AM
westend wrote:
If you want to tackle the stripe painting, it's not that difficult. You'll have to schedule which coat gets painted in a schedule. The background gets painted first, of course, and the stripes follow in succession. Allow some dry time between coats so your tape doesn't pull up the former coats (two days in moderate climate). Straight lines can be marked with a carpenters snap line and the tape is aligned with the snapped chalk line.
Green "Frog" tape is the most forgiving but standard masking tape works about as well.
I did some accent stripes on my rig after painting the body and other panels on my trailer:
โOct-31-2013 04:57 AM
โOct-30-2013 11:29 PM
โOct-30-2013 10:55 PM
โOct-30-2013 07:38 PM